Cal Evans, of Zend Developer Zone (and PHP Abstract) fame has launched a new site to help PHPers with keeping all of their PHP podcasts in one place - PHPPodcasts.com - an archive site to give people searching for PHP podcasts a "one-stop shop".

phppodcasts.com is not a replacement for any of the existing feeds, it won't be on iTunes because it's not in competition with the owners podcasts. It's an archival site and a place for people to explore the different podcasts available for PHP developers before subscribing to them.

Cal Evans, of Zend Developer Zone (and PHP Abstract) fame has launched a new site to help PHPers with keeping all of their PHP podcasts in one place - PHPPodcasts.com - an archive site to give people searching for PHP podcasts a "one-stop shop".

phppodcasts.com is not a replacement for any of the existing feeds, it won't be on iTunes because it's not in competition with the owners podcasts. It's an archival site and a place for people to explore the different podcasts available for PHP developers before subscribing to them.

Ed Finkler agrees with me. Thanks Ed. :-) Listen to the podcast. It's a realistic assessment of the state of security in PHP.

He also includes a favorite quote from the podcast (as said by Ed):

If web developer doesn't understand common security issues they shouldn't be considered developers...[Web applications] essentially are dealing with data that someone is inputting there. As a developer of web applications, you are essentially stewards of that data.

Ed Finkler agrees with me. Thanks Ed. :-) Listen to the podcast. It's a realistic assessment of the state of security in PHP.

He also includes a favorite quote from the podcast (as said by Ed):

If web developer doesn't understand common security issues they shouldn't be considered developers...[Web applications] essentially are dealing with data that someone is inputting there. As a developer of web applications, you are essentially stewards of that data.

On the PHP Security blog today, Stefan Esserpoints out one of the latest episodes of the Pro::PHP Podcast in which Ed Finkler got to talk a little bit about PHP security (seeing as how he's involved with the PHPSecInfo project). One of the things he (Ed) specifically mentions in the interview is the Month of PHP Bugs that Stefan recently wrapped up.

Today I learned about a podcast interview of Ed Finkler one of the members of the PHP Security Consortium. I heard through the first 30 minutes and was kinda bored because it was not really about PHP Security but about educating PHP developers, which is a subtopic of PHP Application Security which itself is a subtopic of PHP Security. I already wanted to switch it off when at around 34:32 they started talking about the Month of PHP Bugs.

Stefanalso notes that Ed didn't mention that several of the MoPB issues had already been released to the PHP group but had yet to of been corrected. Be sure to check out the podcast for yourself, though and see what you think of Ed's comments about PHP security and the MoPB initiative.

On the PHP Security blog today, Stefan Esserpoints out one of the latest episodes of the Pro::PHP Podcast in which Ed Finkler got to talk a little bit about PHP security (seeing as how he's involved with the PHPSecInfo project). One of the things he (Ed) specifically mentions in the interview is the Month of PHP Bugs that Stefan recently wrapped up.

Today I learned about a podcast interview of Ed Finkler one of the members of the PHP Security Consortium. I heard through the first 30 minutes and was kinda bored because it was not really about PHP Security but about educating PHP developers, which is a subtopic of PHP Application Security which itself is a subtopic of PHP Security. I already wanted to switch it off when at around 34:32 they started talking about the Month of PHP Bugs.

Stefanalso notes that Ed didn't mention that several of the MoPB issues had already been released to the PHP group but had yet to of been corrected. Be sure to check out the podcast for yourself, though and see what you think of Ed's comments about PHP security and the MoPB initiative.